LIVING PARTS OF THE STEM 107 



stiffness to the stem. Those of the sapwood, in addition 

 to this work, have to carry most of the water from the 

 roots to the leaves and other distant portions of the plant. 



The cambium layer is the region in which the annual 

 growth of the tree takes place (Figs. 69, 71). 



The most important portion of the inner bark is that 

 which consists of sieve-tubes, for in these digested and 

 elaborated plant-food is carried from the leaves toward the 

 roots. 



The green layer of the bark in young shoots does much 

 toward collecting nutrient substances, or raw materials, 

 and preparing the food of the plant from air and water, 

 but this work may be best explained in connection with 

 the study of the leaf (Chapter XI). 



117. Movement of Water in the Stem. — The student 

 has already learned that large quantities of water are taken 

 up by the roots of plants. 



Having become somewhat acquainted with the structure 

 of the stem, he is now in a position to investigate the 

 question how the various fluids, commonly known as sap, 

 travel about in it.^ It is important to notice that sap is 

 by no means the same substance everywhere and at all 

 times. As it first makes its way by osmotic action inward 

 through the roo1>-hairs of the growing plant it differs but 

 little from ordinary spring water' or well water. The 

 liquid which flows from the cut stem of a "bleeding" 

 grapevine which has been pruned just before the buds 

 have begun to burst in the spring, is mainly water with a 

 little dissolved mucilaginous material. The sap which is 



1 See the paper on " The So-called Sap of Trees and its Movements," by 

 Professor Charles R. Barnes, Science, Vol. XXI, p. 535. 



